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Force feedback for Linux.
By Johann Deneux <deneux@ifrance.com> on 2001/04/22.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
0. Introduction
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This document describes how to use force feedback devices under Linux. The
goal is not to support these devices as if they were simple input-only devices
(as it is already the case), but to really enable the rendering of force
effects.
At the moment, only I-Force devices are supported, and not officially. That
means I had to find out how the protocol works on my own. Of course, the
information I managed to grasp is far from being complete, and I can not
guarranty that this driver will work for you.
This document only describes the force feedback part of the driver for I-Force
devices. Please read joystick.txt before reading further this document.
2. Instructions to the user
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Here are instructions on how to compile and use the driver. In fact, this
driver is the normal iforce.o, input.o and evdev.o drivers written by Vojtech
Pavlik, plus additions to support force feedback.
Before you start, let me WARN you that some devices shake violently during the
initialisation phase. This happens for example with my "AVB Top Shot Pegasus".
To stop this annoying behaviour, move you joystick to its limits. Anyway, you
should keep a hand on your device, in order to avoid it to brake down if
something goes wrong.
At the kernel's compilation:
- Enable IForce/Serial
- Enable Event interface
Compile the modules, install them.
You also need inputattach.
You then need to insert the modules into the following order:
% modprobe joydev
% modprobe serport
% modprobe iforce
% modprobe evdev
% ./inputattach -ifor $2 & # Only for serial
For convenience, you may use the shell script named "ff" available from
the cvs tree of the Linux Console Project at sourceforge. You can also
retrieve it from http://www.esil.univ-mrs.fr/~jdeneux/projects/ff/.
If you are using USB, you don't need the inputattach step.
Please check that you have all the /dev/input entries needed:
cd /dev
rm js*
mkdir input
mknod input/js0 c 13 0
mknod input/js1 c 13 1
mknod input/js2 c 13 2
mknod input/js3 c 13 3
ln -s input/js0 js0
ln -s input/js1 js1
ln -s input/js2 js2
ln -s input/js3 js3
mknod input/event0 c 13 64
mknod input/event1 c 13 65
mknod input/event2 c 13 66
mknod input/event3 c 13 67
2.1 Does it work ?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
There is an utility called fftest that will allow you to test the driver.
% fftest /dev/eventXX
3. Instructions to the developper
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
All interactions are done using the event API. That is, you can use ioctl()
and write() on /dev/input/eventXX.
This information is subject to change.
3.1 Querying device capabilities
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
#include <linux/input.h>
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
int ioctl(int file_descriptor, int request, unsigned long *features);
"request" must be EVIOCGBIT(EV_FF, sizeof(unsigned long))
Returns the features supported by the device. features is a bitfield with the
following bits:
- FF_X has an X axis (should allways be the case)
- FF_Y has an Y axis (usually not the case for wheels)
- FF_CONSTANT can render constant force effects
- FF_PERIODIC can render periodic effects (sine, ramp, square...)
- FF_SPRING can simulate the presence of a spring
- FF_FRICTION can simulate friction (aka drag, damper effect...)
- FF_RUMBLE rumble effects (normally the only effect supported by rumble
pads)
- 8 bits from FF_N_EFFECTS_0 containing the number of effects that can be
simultaneously played.
3.2 Uploading effects to the device
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
#include <linux/input.h>
#include <sys/ioctl.h>
int ioctl(int file_descriptor, int request, struct ff_effect *effect);
"request" must be EVIOCSFF.
"effect" points to a structure describing the effect to upload. The effect is
uploaded, but not played.
The content of effect may be modified. In particular, its field "id" is set
to the unique id assigned by the driver. This data is required for performing
some operations (removing an effect, controlling the playback).
See <linux/input.h> for a description of the ff_effect stuct.
3.3 Removing an effect from the device
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
int ioctl(int fd, EVIOCRMFF, effect.id);
This makes room for new effects in the device's memory. Please note this won't
stop the effect if it was playing.
3.4 Controlling the playback of effects
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Control of playing is done with write(). Below is an example:
#include <linux/input.h>
#include <unistd.h>
struct input_event play;
struct input_event stop;
struct ff_effect effect;
int fd;
...
fd = open("/dev/input/eventXX", O_RDWR);
...
/* Play three times */
play.type = EV_FF;
play.code = effect.id;
play.value = 3;
write(fd, (const void*) &play, sizeof(play));
...
/* Stop an effect */
stop.type = EV_FF;
stop.code = effect.id;
stop.value = 0;
write(fd, (const void*) &play, sizeof(stop));
3.5 Setting the gain
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Not all devices have the same strength. Therefore, users should set a gain
factor depending on how strong they want effects to be. This setting is
persistent accross access to the driver, so you should not care about it if
you are writing games, as another utility probably already set this for you.
/* Set the gain of the device
int gain; /* between 0 and 100 */
struct input_event ie; /* structure used to communicate with the driver */
ie.type = EV_FF;
ie.code = FF_GAIN;
ie.value = 0xFFFFUL * gain / 100;
if (write(fd, &ie, sizeof(ie)) == -1)
perror("set gain");
3.6 Enabling/Disabling autocenter
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The autocenter feature quite disturbs the rendering of effects in my opinion,
and I think it should be an effect, which computation depends on the game
type. But you can enable it if you want.
int autocenter; /* between 0 and 100 */
struct input_event ie;
ie.type = EV_FF;
ie.code = FF_AUTOCENTER;
ie.value = 0xFFFFUL * autocenter / 100;
if (write(fd, &ie, sizeof(ie)) == -1)
perror("set auto-center");
A value of 0 means "no auto-center".
3.7 Dynamic update of an effect
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This consists in changing some parameters of an effect while it's playing. The
driver currently does not support that. You still have the brute-force method,
which consists in erasing the effect and uploading the updated version. It
actually works pretty well. You don't need to stop-and-start the effect.
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